AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

This Craft of Verse.(Review)

New Criterion

| January 01, 2001 | Coleman, Alexander | COPYRIGHT 2001 Foundation for Cultural Review. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Jorge Luis Borges This Craft of Verse, edited by Calin-Andrei Mihailescu. Harvard University Press, 154 pages, $22.95

The publication of the Charles Eliot Norton lectures given by Jorge Luis Borges at Harvard in 1967 is an unusual, as well as a belated, event. Those who heard him recall that, as a public speaker, Borges was never an assured or dominating presence, but he was still a strangely haunting and magnetic figure on the stage. It must be remembered that he was educated at home and had the most fragile contacts with the outside world well into adulthood. A stutter from childhood, sometimes heard even in his old age, complicated matters. There was always a sense of hesitancy, even when he made his most rotund affirmations. Sometimes this could lead to exasperation. The poet Alastair Reid, during a public interview, said to his face, "Borges, you use humility like a club!" Often, his sentences would end with a querulous "no?"--as if asking for affirmation by the hearer. And there was the matter of his Scottish burr, learned in his Buenos Aires infancy from his Scots nanny.

In any case, understatement was the essence of his aesthetic program--touching the hem of the garment, as Robert Frost once put it. Fragments, the minor genres and authors, a line or a strophe here and there: these were all he needed to weave his incantatory spell. But Borges only gradually emerged from his shell, slowly becoming a public figure first in Argentina and then in the world at large. He started "working" at age thirty-seven as first assistant in a dusty local library, a post which he occupied until the arrival of the Peronist regime in 1946. Summary dismissal ensued, with a crystalline justification: "Well, you were on the side of the Allies--what do you expect?" Gradually, both as a professor at the University of Buenos Aires and a much sought-after lecturer on literature in the late Forties and Fifties, Borges was able to supplement the increasingly meager family income.

But he was not yet Borges, the international idol. That came in 1961 when a phalanx of six avant-garde publishers, including Grove Press in New York, created the Prix Formentor, designed to reward a relatively unrecognized author and to "bring the author's work to the attention of the largest possible international audience" Borges shared the prize with Samuel Beckett. An invitation to visit the University of Texas ensued, and the Norton Lectures at Harvard were offered, enabling Borges to spend some seven months in Cambridge in 1967, in the company of his mother, the redoubtable Dona Leonor de Acevedo de Borges.

By then, he was legally blind, as was his father before him at the same age--his was the fifth recorded generation in his family to have extremely poor eyesight. He dictated, his mother and a host of friends read to him aloud, and his astonishing memory was a recompense until the end. Thus, This Craft of Verse, the Norton Lectures, comes to us not as the tardy publication of a manuscript but rather via transcription and annotation of the tape recordings made at that time, assiduously ...

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
Buenos Aires en BORGES, BORGES en Buenos Aires.(Jorge Luis Borges, escritor...
Magazine article from: Tribuna de Actualidad Ramírez, Fátima September 13, 1999 700+ words
...agosto. Para Jorge Luis Borges, Buenos Aires era "un misteriosa hbito...noches durante 40 aos. Buenos Aires y Borges son una misma cosa, como...Por eso, la visita a Buenos Aires siguiendo el rastro de Borges es una verdadera tentacin...
Sightless seer of Buenos Aires; Jorge Luis Borges.(Borges: A Life)(Book Review)
Magazine article from: The Economist (US) September 11, 2004 700+ words
...housekeeper in a poky Buenos Aires flat until she died...writing of Jorge Luis Borges tells us about the inner...political naivety, Borges had a nobler vision...man, he idealised the Buenos Aires underworld--its knife...In his mid-50s, Borges began to enjoy an international...
Edna Aizenberg. Books and Bombs in Buenos Aires: Borges, Gerchunoff, and...
Magazine article from: World Literature Today Foster, David William April 1, 2003 700+ words
...the Jewish presence in Buenos Aires, and the rebuilding...cultural presence in Buenos Aires, because it is Aizenberg...tongue," Yiddish (Buenos Aires as a site of Yiddish...Argentine canon, such as Borges and Gerchunoff, and...
Alberto Manguel, the author of, among other books, A History of Reading, was...
Magazine article from: First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life Neuhaus, Richard John May 1, 2007 700+ words
...serving as a clerk in a Buenos Aires bookstore when he was picked up by Jorge Luis Borges. Not for any nefarious...may be sure, but because Borges was blind and needed someone...to him. Manguel says: "Borges used people as his notepads...
Buenos Aires.
Buenos Aires & the Best of Argentina Greenberg, Arnold January 1, 2000 700+ words
...again very popular. If Buenos Aires is your only Argentinean...short, an Argentine. Buenos Aires, a familar place south...native son Jorge Luis Borges to write: A mi se me hace cuenta que empezo Buenos Aires. La juzgo tan eterna...
A poetics of the interstice: the mundane and the metaphysical in Fervor de...
Magazine article from: The Romanic Review Castillo, Jorge Luis March 1, 2007 700+ words
...important occurrence in Borges's early poetry...particularly in Fervor de Buenos Aires, his first published...the poetic act, Borges's early poetry...particularly Fervor de Buenos Aires, marks a transitional...personae in Fervor de Buenos Aires; but, rather than...has ...
Once miradas sobre Buenos Aires.(De Viaje)
Newspaper article from: Reforma (México D.F., México) October 20, 2002 700+ words
...en una caminata perdida en Buenos Aires hasta las dos de la maana...ineludibles en la ciudad de Buenos Aires, segn Szurmuk: el primero parte de la que segn Borges es "la manzana donde empieza Buenos Aires", es decir, el barrio...
Gaceta del Angel / Lejana Buenos Aires II.(Ciudad y Metrópoli)
Newspaper article from: Reforma (México D.F., México) January 6, 2005 700+ words
...salgo a las calles de Buenos Aires y me siento seguro...nuestra visita guiada por Buenos Aires. Nuestro gua nos vio...calle Maip donde vivi Borges, queramos tambin conocer...nos lanzamos a planchar Buenos Aires con inmenso fervor...
For more facts and information, see all results
©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA